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Rational ^nti
taiikri
VOL. XXI. NO. 10.
NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1860.
WHOLE NO. 1,050.
gtoturoal guiti-f lar«H ^tawtoil,
PUBLISHED WEEKLY, ON SATURDAY,
AMERICAS ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY,
THE STANDARD.
WENDELL PHILLIPS AND THE TRIBUNE.
Lincoln is designated as " the slave-hound of lllinoi
'lhe chnrii-c i„ has...I upon the allem-d fact that on I
H)th of January. LS-1'J. Mr. Lincoln, being then
member of Congress, moved lo roounsideAho u
instructing the Cmnot,,.,, mi the District ...i'Coluinl
Ibpu-.b.-ans'j candidate."
'We Will ir, Ll an-wer
".Mr. l-.ucoln.'in order to i
in.-obi
The tirst chai-ec is thai
trod,ice liiis bill.re.pui.ste.1
vote instructing the Com
S.S.
lake any motiou to that eifeel
i the table was acte
reaohedj be voted
icndnient which change!
ill" e- u icijivliomibie, Mr. Lincoln's vote i
; but when, soon after, t
'. 1'. " has thus
What, then, was the eours
motion was made to lay tl
i table. Mr. Lincoln, at this
lie urged him to with.).-,'
is the bill which " W. .
B a section, and becat
bbet. a Northern houn.
This proposition,
trict, who all appri
fact, and, applying
[gafoatM*
No wonder -Mr. Lincoln is unwill-
opposition to the Fugitive Slave
lhe Chicago Convention omitted
esolutions I"
m of hi-
muds' of
charge (his wishing i
ye clause over the District i;
-, ■■'flic charge is based apo
ami. by l.nitod States offiei
o remain such until Iheii- htildcrs wished lo sell the]
H which time ihe l.'niled States tloycj-ii.ue.it wi
>ound to buy them. -HI.. All this was to be law, if
District'was to be sluveliuuti'ng ground fore-
robbery, it' ill..- robbers re.pa.-sl it 11 Ami th
olh. The
won,,, lb;
—that is all.
I's'bi'll. Themm'uYi'pa.l'aiii'he.-
my charge. I now add that The. New
f his bill, quoted abo-
" T1" '■' footing
'don a footing trilk ail lhe Sim
tn.'s from service', u-ftensl
</ noiking more, if VirrjL
noways in Boston,
paribus, why she
iioston, should not
he Constitutio
■am that this
The"New York Tribi
V. IS. .\s Tin- Tribune first introduced i
nto ibis discussion. I might justly claim that
ice. 1 do claim, tor the sake of lair plai
uiblish in its columns the first t wo nty-eighl
ny former article on which il comments. " 1
NDEPENBENGE DAY,
Ami-Sk.very Ci'Hniliiiii al rnimiiuijiam. muss.
h.ilepon.lcu.
■I believe that the Declaration
■ly, has been recognized as t
in till you,- memories that we ha
" 'freedom wa
eighty-fi
sss.
Mr. Lincoln n
r charged bin
t the t
i- athtir
villi making one, I said, " Mi
introduce this hill, rr'/ite.-itr.I th
.'he reader can judg.
'hen Mi
drew fur a momcnl Ins molion Iwluri, was to i.av
the table the .notion to reconsider). Mr. Line.
" said, by courtesy of his colleague., he would .
that if the von- on lhe resolul ion was reconsidered
read." The above request it:
•, though t'itcy
i, fully under
aste our strength and cur breath in t
convince people who never can be <
: by the force of necessity. Therefor
where the system is weak." AH'the anti-slavery or:
us that have spoken from this or any other platforn
il tee Republican orators that have wasted the tim
f the nation, in Congress or out of it, have don
othmg compared with the famous success of thos
s the priest, in ntheroUasa"rificSr*hTLyiift!edUhi
Xl: '" sn'ite the victim, knew where the fatal poin
jctions like that at Harper's Ferry do you suppos
.Is of the arouse,
t would ereate \
i-ouhl create then
e brought to tin
idem.'from the
lo we see there?
.'-!l rb'!,1""1'''"-'
-a.e, I II I ,
Air. President,
t seems to me, Mr. President, that no one e
proceedings of ihe last one or two months
ss ami iu political conventions, without, it'
before, acceptinc; —almost accepting—lhe i
the "total depravity" of mankind'. Wb,
erats and even by Repub
by the meanness of the!
idujc^ngT^re°U nol a
respectable joki
ments advanee'd, by
■i 'liv'-fh.
tdlin talk of the
, losing everythin.
too long—longer far tha:
^claimed your attention
nd myself called upon t
,g trespassed
we the country open to
l gloomy thoughts, that
i hour of hope for the
zszs
■ing towards lhe platform, which was at once yieldec
o him: aud when the applause which areet'ed lm
oinmg had subsided, he addressed the :::
itantially as follows :
Speech of Hon. Henry IVilsun,
Mr. President, Ladies and Gkntlemek: I oamt
here to-day, tin 1 often do, lo listen to the words o:
whose devotion to a proscribed and hunted race
ough they deem it to be their duty to criticize mi
I which reflected upon their motives. The gentle-
to whose eloquence J have just listened witl
iration, Las seen fit to make a personal allusior
: statement, whieh he made did
lvey the truth to this atuliei.ee. '
abolish slavery in the Di'siVi'.-i ofc"
(ent ol' the people. Or rather, Mr.
ion of tha,"-
mmls of this
tl-slavery men of Mas
rnessto the acts of i
introduce into the Con
t he should be hut
regresented(applause).
ict justice—that is all I ask.
!.. ' i .:'.:;': ,.,
.ii-h Congress may not touch in the S(
■:■ c : ..,■■■■■ I : ■ j- - i
Speech of Frank B. Sanborn.
Mr. Saxhorn was heartily cheered as he <:
ml ii] lhe plallbrim He said :
Mk. President—You do me altogether (.
nor to call me the hero of the Concord I
.- misfortune to have an intemperate fath
,v he looked onto:' the door, ami saw 1
.ning borne, h-d bv two neighbors, llerai
s mother, and said, - Look, mother, lool
Sanborn eonc-i
e L'nited States. The A
fill; but
ory on our side
.lined—If 1 w
' which he will apprccia
hal when Mr. Line,,],, (wi
._ .„ s ration, he voted with Albe
Brown, Howell Cobb, Ilhett and Toombs, again
voted'to get
Giddmgs, Di
Julius Kockwell, Oollai
T.'wiln.ot, Went.worth and
hich'anti-slavery, it. will be easy Ibr any one to
'flic. s1iil;Ic vnti' of Mr. Lincoln against laving the
h/,ie mollis on the table, in which Tin- 'IZRm>-
ml uo slave shall be brought
.initially,'1st, that no slave shal
to think
; program
rol'liherly.an,
If it fails i:
veils, it will overthrow the inlliieiic
Government. The licpublicaa part
a the South to be de.alt with by th
■f tjm people ot'those States.
i Republican party i;
local—a State inst
; legally i
■ Male rights
the du ty of excluding' sla>
upon that idea. It has
'I'm
ivery iu lhe States to <ro down uiuler the huh in (laces of all that is pure and noble in the mover,,, ot'
.Mrs, KosTi-a;—I -vVish Mr. Wilson would answer one
lestion iicliire 1„- leaves the ]ilatfon„. It is this :
lieiem is the llcpul beau plaiform.on ihe siibie..-: of
ivory, belter than the Whig platform, when that
parly nun!,; its las] cfo.rt. and Mr. Wiksou left the
parly iiecause he could not stand on thai ofotform?
If he will answ-er that ipicstion. ! think we shall all
tlicUepubli
ii of the Whig party.,
; party of Massachus.
I will met
.torn,,brims foot
artywns divided upon that question, and tolera
ie dillerence. Iu 181H, ia the great crisis of
ountry.whcn we had obtained,'by tho peace v
Myinend (i„;, !„..,,. ;, nhuJ tht,m-
' i I llUhl.s but by
Nie Uhi,s ol tins .aate.nnd a ,cw oil,,./ .W-h-n.
lugs. who occupied precis,], m,r p„sitit„, to-da.
Now, how stands Ih- llcpubliean partV Thi,
.rlyv.as founded upon lhe acceptance of the Wilmot
'1 to prohibit slavery
Elates. That is oui
om the "Whig party
ibr myself, I intend to do what I c
make the parly perish (applause).
f States, ought tc
r,v.l
s time to adjourn,
tood the Republi-
like any
Terr
f the
"ui a i t necessary and
S a right to take his slav, s
as slaves in bo.idaae. lie
ler informed, that between
li lus doctrine ol'-popului-
ml.) lean
■nip.any again gathered
meeting was muled to o
president. A Iter the singing of an appropriate 1,'vmu
-Mr.l.ARKisoM to,.;; ihe piunbrm, and spoke as follow,.
Speech of William Lloyd Garrison.
Mr. I'uk-uj.kst: I folly agree with my friend,
senator W ilson, that the Antlntilaverv cause is onward
oid uj,ward, and ihat. cither throng], the parlies or
l- la-t. IVi-!,;:,.. i«i:.;:,l
:-l,1,"t l,l-";-t -im.-mionaib.,., any m.au or iieilv
•t men, to any party or seel in the land. \\~c shall
tain nothing, assuredly, by dctraetlon : and we had
than of intolei
wiuiied— and they have been mnltitudin
SHoado"so,Uieean
that it has
inti-alavery party, what it
; intends to meddle i
i- held m b'ondiige, thai
he'ivsu^of!
iii]ieri;..i-t as
)ur_ object is Vie aboliti
mti-slavery liearts—I kn<
slavery throughout the
party goes down, it is'
^'foe'm.elyes"
' particular 'parly. We
■no j,.]. or til.le. I hough glad to observe the slighter
ign oi progress ill any direction.
Republic:;a partv
not believe that it
e. party. I d
to the anti-slaver
party. I believe (he I
-. everything of hostility t<
-<1 that, as ti partv. ii j's t|
Itepubl
; Demo
,;l.",-v le'opose I,-, th,: To prcy'er
of its resolutions adopted ■
ind tha
mlyaslt him this: What is i heViWn'm-c'bc; ll
a Hepublictin platform of to-day ami Un- Whig phit-
:-].i when hi; left that party-.' j ti.sk him. would he
t semt with indignation ami loathing the thought
at he could have voted for Daniel Webster, afte
s speech of lBoO : and I ask him what is tho dillei
ee between Daniel "Webster in .1850 ami Abrahai
'.") 1 do nol
8, when the Whig party
o (applause). Ho,
all;
lis year and its les
flic best, the onlv honest experiment at Demo-
, rumed before our eves ; and if it dot's not last
through its first century, when can we expect it to la
"but this is till, perhaps, the excited feeling of tl«
use it will live when
overnment from it, ar
ifluenecsofahumane;
When you undertak.
ind Christian eivilii
to lhe rfoht. I
Ihal -.onshall
.me good deed
who love thee
that, alio,- ll
Unit Mr. Dough.ss, wilh every power, everv talent
which, had he been of our own race, would have
secured him a pro uineiit position, not onl} among the
citizenm, but among tbe rulcri of this country, and,
veil, lake lhe
■ainst the extension .
.neither Mr. jUlen
invention, nor Mr.
e'whig party did 1
vor of the Comprom
' Ltal. and New 1
averv, but with tl:
to the l.'iiion sfoi
made
'_on the general agital
hing maybe done,
party has alwtn
' "iend, Senat;
wbhal'i
stop the progress of slavery, if t
".bol.tion; and to this e.- ' -
btained justice at my
ad ilim'wiliin^t^'ai'.c.lrd to hi'tl",fo°\.Sif.'"^
aSy-V b'ut011'^ pr.Tnent membcr ^ the Kepubli
" .' i ]. I' . "':„,' '■,'■ ." ' "■"• ,,
.. I.;..i .... " ." "': ■ <'■'■< I'osiiion
irtyastheho'p'eoftl
-.think
and
111!
Now, this is clear, ex],licit, and above-board, and
. lai- :r, slavery is concerned withm Cm Territories'
■ems to be unenmpmufoing, ], ,1,-iiics the ri<:ht of
i.v bodvt.i] men lo make slaves or to enforce Slavery
t.dcr tin- Icmlersltip of Mcphen A Douglas, afl'iniW
"' >-"S>l "t the people ,,f any Territory Lo determine
m themselves, by a laajoriti vole, whether thev will
ay.- slaves or not ; and again, under lhe leadership
t iMr.l.reckmridge, of the other wing ot' (he p.n-tv,
lamtilins that, constitutionally, any slaveholder ha,
f of the
ssue, let the Republican
I to see ki'it.'if i't hasVe govem-
mt ia the Territories never shall a
icld in bondage, ^1 am glad for all
the l.'niled ,-iatu,'.' Do.-s ,1 holii'tmv .ihKnvnt '.ioc'
trme, essentially, from the Dcmocraiic party, in regard
to the^old pro-slavery compromisi-s? X,, \ir friend.
l asked whal lint Compro-
!>S-"'t !]-Ctl!at'
that the llepubliei-
fugitive slaves; ce
certainly, it has spiked every ,
foe accursed Fugitive Slave ltJ
■t law was passed by Confess,
imily pledged themselves that t
! Kepublican party
, the General Gove
tl States,!.-, the person of Abraham Lincoln, or
rue to: any Other repre-ealalivc of lhe lb-publican pane.
; and,l W, the question com,-, home to mo, as an honest,

Rational ^nti
taiikri
VOL. XXI. NO. 10.
NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1860.
WHOLE NO. 1,050.
gtoturoal guiti-f lar«H ^tawtoil,
PUBLISHED WEEKLY, ON SATURDAY,
AMERICAS ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY,
THE STANDARD.
WENDELL PHILLIPS AND THE TRIBUNE.
Lincoln is designated as " the slave-hound of lllinoi
'lhe chnrii-c i„ has...I upon the allem-d fact that on I
H)th of January. LS-1'J. Mr. Lincoln, being then
member of Congress, moved lo roounsideAho u
instructing the Cmnot,,.,, mi the District ...i'Coluinl
Ibpu-.b.-ans'j candidate."
'We Will ir, Ll an-wer
".Mr. l-.ucoln.'in order to i
in.-obi
The tirst chai-ec is thai
trod,ice liiis bill.re.pui.ste.1
vote instructing the Com
S.S.
lake any motiou to that eifeel
i the table was acte
reaohedj be voted
icndnient which change!
ill" e- u icijivliomibie, Mr. Lincoln's vote i
; but when, soon after, t
'. 1'. " has thus
What, then, was the eours
motion was made to lay tl
i table. Mr. Lincoln, at this
lie urged him to with.).-,'
is the bill which " W. .
B a section, and becat
bbet. a Northern houn.
This proposition,
trict, who all appri
fact, and, applying
[gafoatM*
No wonder -Mr. Lincoln is unwill-
opposition to the Fugitive Slave
lhe Chicago Convention omitted
esolutions I"
m of hi-
muds' of
charge (his wishing i
ye clause over the District i;
-, ■■'flic charge is based apo
ami. by l.nitod States offiei
o remain such until Iheii- htildcrs wished lo sell the]
H which time ihe l.'niled States tloycj-ii.ue.it wi
>ound to buy them. -HI.. All this was to be law, if
District'was to be sluveliuuti'ng ground fore-
robbery, it' ill..- robbers re.pa.-sl it 11 Ami th
olh. The
won,,, lb;
—that is all.
I's'bi'll. Themm'uYi'pa.l'aiii'he.-
my charge. I now add that The. New
f his bill, quoted abo-
" T1" '■' footing
'don a footing trilk ail lhe Sim
tn.'s from service', u-ftensl
noiking more, if VirrjL
noways in Boston,
paribus, why she
iioston, should not
he Constitutio
■am that this
The"New York Tribi
V. IS. .\s Tin- Tribune first introduced i
nto ibis discussion. I might justly claim that
ice. 1 do claim, tor the sake of lair plai
uiblish in its columns the first t wo nty-eighl
ny former article on which il comments. " 1
NDEPENBENGE DAY,
Ami-Sk.very Ci'Hniliiiii al rnimiiuijiam. muss.
h.ilepon.lcu.
■I believe that the Declaration
■ly, has been recognized as t
in till you,- memories that we ha
" 'freedom wa
eighty-fi
sss.
Mr. Lincoln n
r charged bin
t the t
i- athtir
villi making one, I said, " Mi
introduce this hill, rr'/ite.-itr.I th
.'he reader can judg.
'hen Mi
drew fur a momcnl Ins molion Iwluri, was to i.av
the table the .notion to reconsider). Mr. Line.
" said, by courtesy of his colleague., he would .
that if the von- on lhe resolul ion was reconsidered
read." The above request it:
•, though t'itcy
i, fully under
aste our strength and cur breath in t
convince people who never can be <
: by the force of necessity. Therefor
where the system is weak." AH'the anti-slavery or:
us that have spoken from this or any other platforn
il tee Republican orators that have wasted the tim
f the nation, in Congress or out of it, have don
othmg compared with the famous success of thos
s the priest, in ntheroUasa"rificSr*hTLyiift!edUhi
Xl: '" sn'ite the victim, knew where the fatal poin
jctions like that at Harper's Ferry do you suppos
.Is of the arouse,
t would ereate \
i-ouhl create then
e brought to tin
idem.'from the
lo we see there?
.'-!l rb'!,1""1'''"-'
-a.e, I II I ,
Air. President,
t seems to me, Mr. President, that no one e
proceedings of ihe last one or two months
ss ami iu political conventions, without, it'
before, acceptinc; —almost accepting—lhe i
the "total depravity" of mankind'. Wb,
erats and even by Repub
by the meanness of the!
idujc^ngT^re°U nol a
respectable joki
ments advanee'd, by
■i 'liv'-fh.
tdlin talk of the
, losing everythin.
too long—longer far tha:
^claimed your attention
nd myself called upon t
,g trespassed
we the country open to
l gloomy thoughts, that
i hour of hope for the
zszs
■ing towards lhe platform, which was at once yieldec
o him: aud when the applause which areet'ed lm
oinmg had subsided, he addressed the :::
itantially as follows :
Speech of Hon. Henry IVilsun,
Mr. President, Ladies and Gkntlemek: I oamt
here to-day, tin 1 often do, lo listen to the words o:
whose devotion to a proscribed and hunted race
ough they deem it to be their duty to criticize mi
I which reflected upon their motives. The gentle-
to whose eloquence J have just listened witl
iration, Las seen fit to make a personal allusior
: statement, whieh he made did
lvey the truth to this atuliei.ee. '
abolish slavery in the Di'siVi'.-i ofc"
(ent ol' the people. Or rather, Mr.
ion of tha,"-
mmls of this
tl-slavery men of Mas
rnessto the acts of i
introduce into the Con
t he should be hut
regresented(applause).
ict justice—that is all I ask.
!.. ' i .:'.:;': ,.,
.ii-h Congress may not touch in the S(
■:■ c : ..,■■■■■ I : ■ j- - i
Speech of Frank B. Sanborn.
Mr. Saxhorn was heartily cheered as he -
ml uo slave shall be brought
.initially,'1st, that no slave shal
to think
; program
rol'liherly.an,
If it fails i:
veils, it will overthrow the inlliieiic
Government. The licpublicaa part
a the South to be de.alt with by th
■f tjm people ot'those States.
i Republican party i;
local—a State inst
; legally i
■ Male rights
the du ty of excluding' sla>
upon that idea. It has
'I'm
ivery iu lhe States to -"S>l "t the people ,,f any Territory Lo determine
m themselves, by a laajoriti vole, whether thev will
ay.- slaves or not ; and again, under lhe leadership
t iMr.l.reckmridge, of the other wing ot' (he p.n-tv,
lamtilins that, constitutionally, any slaveholder ha,
f of the
ssue, let the Republican
I to see ki'it.'if i't hasVe govem-
mt ia the Territories never shall a
icld in bondage, ^1 am glad for all
the l.'niled ,-iatu,'.' Do.-s ,1 holii'tmv .ihKnvnt '.ioc'
trme, essentially, from the Dcmocraiic party, in regard
to the^old pro-slavery compromisi-s? X,, \ir friend.
l asked whal lint Compro-
!>S-"'t !]-Ctl!at'
that the llepubliei-
fugitive slaves; ce
certainly, it has spiked every ,
foe accursed Fugitive Slave ltJ
■t law was passed by Confess,
imily pledged themselves that t
! Kepublican party
, the General Gove
tl States,!.-, the person of Abraham Lincoln, or
rue to: any Other repre-ealalivc of lhe lb-publican pane.
; and,l W, the question com,-, home to mo, as an honest,